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Posts tagged ‘Kathy’

11
Jun

Gastroschisis in 1966

I guess I may officially be the oldest surviving gastroschisis baby on this board thus far! I’ve got you beat by one month, Kathy! I was born at Yale New Haven Hospital in Connecticut, USA in August of 1966 with gastroschisis. I was a full term baby weighing 7 lbs. 6 oz. Without the modern advances of ultrasound, my mother had no idea that I would be born with this birth defect. She was 22 and I was her first child. I was in ICU for about 4 weeks. At that time, mothers were not allowed any contact with their newborns in neonatal ICU, and I recall her telling me how heartsick she was that she was not able to hold me or take me home.

It was traumatic as a little girl and young teenager having no belly button (I also had nothing covering my umbilical area, so I have a 3″ scar in the middle of my abdomen), but I soon got to like educating people who thought it was impossible not to have a belly button! By the time I was in my late teens, I had no problem wearing a bikini on the beach and no longer felt self conscious about my scar. The only thing I find annoying now is that some of the skin at the top of the scar puckers out (my surgeon’s poor attempt to “create” something that resembled a belly button) and rubs on my clothing.

In putting my internal organs back inside my abdomen, the surgeons removed my appendix, but other than that, as far as I know everything is normal internally. I had a completely normal childhood physically, though I did and do tend to have problems with bad gas pains from time to time (don’t know if that is related to the gastroschisis or not).

Since I adopted both my children, I do not know if there are any effects on my fertility due to the gastroschisis. I never tried to get pregnant, so I have no reason to believe that I am infertile. Everything else seems to be working correctly in that department.

My 3 year old is at that stage where every person she draws has a belly button. I always know which pictures are of me! In fact, two weeks ago she informed her entire preschool class that her mommy did not have a belly button and her teacher argued with her that that couldn’t be true! When I came to pick my daughter up, the teacher said, “You would not believe what your daughter told us today. She says you have no belly button.” Boy, was she shocked when I told her that my little one was telling the truth! I usually get a “how can that be?” response. I tell people, “a belly button is not a vital organ!” People don’t seem to understand that you can be born with an umbilical cord but still not end up with a belly button!

So, as Kathy says, for all the moms out there worried about their babies with gastroschisis, please take heart in the fact that there are those of us who survived without any of the modern conviences of the 21st century and many of us are trudging into middle age leading perfectly healthy lives!

19
May

I was a gastrochisis baby

All I can say is wow! I never knew so many people suffered from this I was born in September 1966 full term 2 lbs 8 ozs. what they called it at the time a severe gastric hernia. I spent 2 months in in prenatal intensive care had my heart stopped 3 times and still made it.

Well I’m 41 have 2 beautiful kids now 20 and 11 and my case I didn’t have any covering (skin) over my umbilical area so I never had the normal belly button just a crater and yes it was hard to deal with as a child but I had a great supportive grandmother.

Any way when I had my son in 1997 I found out that my small intestines were sewn to my abdominal wall which I was never to have leiposcopic surgery . which was fine because it would perforate my intestines and I would die. O k I could remember that. And told my care giver in the future.

Well, about a month ago I had severe pain in my right lower side thinking I’m having an appendicitis. well surprise it wasn’t . I had 3 small bowl obstructions due to scare tissue . And well also found out that my appendix wasn’t even in the right spot. matter of fact my whole small and large intestines were not text book laid out. that explains a lot of bad gas pains as a child.

Well back then you didn’t have specialist for every thing my mother told me and they didn’t use mesh and such like they do now. and when I was developing in the womb my intestines grew out not up like normal.

So it’s a 100% mortality rate for obstructed bowl after 36 hours I’m starting to feel like a cat with 9 live here. but now every thing is fine and more battle scars to add to my collection. but it could happen again any time. I was told.

By the way, there were 3 cases that was reported at the same time that year, I was the worst case. The environmental people did investigate and asked my mom a whole bunch of questions, all of course were not the cause. so. to those mom’s out there yes your children will be fine just delicate little fighters. and will live a normal life.

Kathy

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